ME becoming a millwright

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Jack Burton

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Hey guys, I was hoping for some advice. I worked in a unionized trade before I went back to school for my BSME. I did well in school and graduated with honors. After landing a job as an associate design engineer, I was laid off about a year later for reasons unrelated to work performance. Anyways, it's been hell just finding job adverts that fit my experience let alone landing interviews. I've always been a hands-on type which is why jobs like "sales engineer" are just not my cup of tea. Ideally, I like to spend half the day at a desk and the other half tinkering with something but that doesn't seem possible right now.

At this time, I'm seriously thinking of re-joining the union and apprenticing as a Millwright. The pay would start at half of what I was making as an Engineer though I would be learning things I've always wanted to learn. I was thinking that a BSME and a 4-year Millwright ticket might be a very rare and valuable asset. On the other hand, this could be detrimental to my future as an Engineer. Any thoughts or opinions? Thanks

 
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As long as you enjoy it, I'd say go for it. As for being detrimental, there's too many variables, but I'd say generally no problem. May even be different enough on your resume to get you a few interviews.

You're talking grain milling or I am a Gigantic *********

 
Your career order is backwards from the way I've seen it done before, but I think it would give you very valuable experience. We have a young electrical engineer that spent a few years as a commercial electrician before going to engineering school. He is the "go to" guy when anyone in the office wants to know how the contractor is really going to do the work in the field, regardless of what the intent of the design is.

 
If you're willing to travel for a living, e.g. field engineering, it will probably work out. If trying to stay local/settle down, acknowledge that the lack of any engineering experience over a lengthy span can hurt your job prospects.

 
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